PAGE FOUR THE CLARION May 8, 1970 TORNADO WARNING! By MARK TODD Track Squad Headed For Nationals Suddenly the semester and the school year are coming to a frenzied close, a close perhaps not un like most of the preceding part of the year. In this final little piece of journalism, it seems a good time to take a look at the whole sports year at Brevard College in pers'pective. Needless to say, it has been a good year, a successful year. Brevard College has sent to the NJCAA Nationals the Cross Country Team, Soccer Team, and soon, the Track Team. The fired up Bas ketball Team managed to make it all the way to the regionals by trouncing highly regarded Gaston Col lege this winter. The Brevard College Golf Team, forced to go completely with non-returning talent, found the tal ent it had to be its best in Brevard College history. They stunned the Western Carolinas Junior College Conference last week by taking a comeback victory over highly favored Spartanburg Junior College. And let’s not forget the Tennis Team, the first team in history for Brevard to gain a fair amount of suc cess. But while basking in the glow of the succ^ Brevard has had, we must stop and think who has been responsible for all these honors. Of course, the staff including Coaches Martin, Burch, Witek and Neal, must once again be commended. But perhaps it is impossible to thank the people most responsib e for the success. All the nameless, perhaps unseen heroes 'played perhaps the bigger part. While it is true that the stars in these various sports did everything they could to lead the team to victory, thev undoubtedly would have failed if the team as a ‘whole, including the numeroias obscure members, had not given their full support. It is to these many hard working, spirited, and dedicated competitors that much of the credit belongs even though they are not the ones who get the headlines. Indeed, they are a major part of any successful team’s success. By ED WILLIAMS After successfully defending its title, Brevard College’s track team has the big task of making a good showing in the National Junior College Athle tics Association Track Meet in Kansas on May 16-17. Throughout the season, which began in April, the track team has swept by some of the small schools in the conference and some of the big schools not in our conference. Soccer Team Loses To Western Carolina BREVARD SOCCER Brevard College met West ern Carolina University last Friday at Cullowhee for the last soccer match of the spring season. Western Carolina was fully prepared to win since they lost their last match to Brevard on April 3. The score was 7-6 in favor of Western Carolina. Western Carolina scored five goals in a row in the first quarter, and Brevard scored three in the sec ond quarter. During the third quarter, Ralph Lundy, Brevard’s half-back, passed a corner kick close enough to the goal that one Western Carolina full-back knocked it in by mistake. It helped Brevard score one more. Mike Michner scored two; Brackey Brenizer scored one; and John Collins put in one, in the losing effort. Tennessee, our biggest threat, fell very short of their propos ed victory over Brevard. The Roadrunners caught them look ing and won fourteen events out of seventeen, thus handing Tennessee their first loss in six years. Wingate, Milligan, and Cum berland fell to the mighty rush of Brevard also. Then came the Regional Tract Meet at Sand Hills, North Carolina. The mem. bers of the team asked each other whether they had driven to the Carribean or to some remote desert sand dune. For at Sandhills, the temperature must have been about ninety degrees, and with not a trace of shade on the track and a limited number of losses. What began as a very wide-open track meet ended in a massacre in favor of the Roadrunners. As if the weather were test ing the team’s ability, rain and cold air greeted the team at the Rome Relays in Rome, Georgia, on May 1. Berry College of Rome, Georgia, was favored by the local sports fans, but after ^some hair - raising moments, Brevard got the momentum go ing and opened up the margin to victory. This ended our sea son with a 7-0 record—the best track season in Brevard’s his tory. Now it’s off to the Nationals, hard work and hopefully a re ward. World News Roundup By: BARBARA PARIS U. S. LAUNCHES DRIVE in to Cambodia to attack the half a dozen untouched enemy bas es left stretched along the western border of the Mekong Delta to the region north of Saigon. Ten Americans were reported killed and 38 wound ed. STRIKE CALLED FOR by campus newspapers across the country to protest the military action in Cambodia. Strikes have been declared at Prince ton, the University of Penn., Sarah Lawrence and Bryan Mawr, and strike plans are un der way at Notre Dame, Bran- deis University and Stanford. WALLACE BIDS to regain the governor’s chair in Ala bama and is expected to have a tight race. If Wallace loses the Democratic primary, it could dull his national political image. INDIA LEADERS push for- their own nuclear weapons sys tem, and it is only a question of 'time before the step is taken. Many are still against the bomb, but it is stated that a majority of members of the Parliament are in favor of changing the na tion’s long standing peace pol icy. ‘Robert A. Davis Installed Secretarial Class Visits GE The Secretarial Science 27 class took their last class iod on Tuesday, May 5, and visited the General Electric plant in Hendersonville. The group did this in order to get a better idea of what working conditions will be when they are actually on the job in a few weeks. SUPPORT CAMPUS RADIO i STATION The prospective secretaries were first given an introduc tion to GE by Mr. Tom Neal, Public Relations Manager and a former graduate of Brevard College. They were also shown slides of the parts of the plant which they would not see on their tour and of how GE light ing is used all over the world. One of the secretaries at GE Mrs. Pat Wilde, then took the girls on a tour of the plant. They were taken to different division offices, and in each office they were given a brief explanation of the work which is done there. (Continued from Page One) as well as factual knowledge and in the favor of God as well as the favor of man, “To the Trustees and to the church which called this institu tion into being and which now sustains it, I pledge my all to the end that neither this gene ration nor the next shall be sold cheaply to false values and easy answers which cannot sustain a faithful life.” The principal address at the inaugural program was delivered by Bishop Earl G. Hunt, Jr., resident bishop of the Charlotte Area of The United Methodist Church. Bishop Hunt stated that “the Christian college today, in spite of all its problems, is a far stronger enterprise than it was in earlier periods of its history.” He said ,“Our nation re quires for the safe preserva tion of both its idealism and maintenance of a dull system of colleges and universities.” Bishop Hunt went on to add; “I pause to pay grateful tribute to state-supported higher edu cation and its galaxy of dis tinguished teachers and ad ministrators—nowhere brighter than here in North Carolina. “But at the same time, we must reaffirm the importance of the historic duality of the private-public system of high er education, with its invalu able structure of checks and balances. “The church-related college throughout its history, has played what may be called the ‘role of conscience’ to public institutions as the point of value articulation and the concept of commitment,” he continued. The Bishop praised Presi dent Davis as effecting “a combination of astute under standing of the student mind the Christian church.” The inaugural program was the highlight of a full weekend of activities which began with the dedication of the McLarty- Goodson Classroom Building and an Inaugural Dinner Fri day, May 1st. The dinner was followed by an Inaugural Con cert in the Dunham Music Cen ter provided by Brevard’s music department. Saturday, May 2nd activities began with the annual meeting of the college’s board of trus tees, followed by an Inaugural Luncheon and the Inaugural Program at 2:30 p.m. Music for the Inaugural Program was provided by the music department of Brevard College and the Brevard Senior High School Concert Band. A reception honoring President Davis was held after the ceremony in the .Tames Addison Jones Library. PARSON'S for JEWELRY & GIFTS main street BREVARD WELCOME BREVARD COLLEGE 'STUDENTS and FACULTY CO - ED and BREVARD DRIVE - IN THEATERS For RECORDS THE Dining Pleasure COSMETICS BREVARD Visit PRESCRIPTIONS MOTOR Gaither's Restaurant Duvairs Drug LODGE Downtown Brevard THE COLLEGE ACROSS FROM THE COLLEGE Open 6 a.m. until 9 p.m. SHOPPING CENTER 883-3115 ^]AJateri Jioriit 37 EAST MAIN ST. BREVARD, N. C. DIAL 883-8115